Top-down descending modulation of dorsal spinal excitatory transmission from the insular cortex
Qi-Yu Chen, Ren-Hao Liu, Shiwen Xue, Min Zhuo

TL;DR
This study explores how the insular cortex influences spinal cord activity, finding mixed effects on excitatory transmission.
Contribution
The study identifies a direct projection from the insular cortex to the spinal cord and reveals non-uniform modulation effects.
Findings
IC stimulation delayed inhibition of spontaneous excitatory transmission in some spinal neurons.
IC activation did not significantly alter the spinal nociceptive tail-flick reflex.
The IC's top-down modulation differs from the consistently facilitatory ACC-spinal cord projection.
Abstract
The insular cortex (IC), a critical hub for nociception, emotion, and cognition processing, has emerged as a key role in the descending modulation of spinal cord excitability. Although previous studies have suggested that IC may influence spinal nociceptive reflexes through direct or indirect top-down pathways, the specific effects of IC stimulation on spinal nociceptive transmission remain unclear. In this study, by combining in vivo whole-cell patch-clamp, behavioral and morphological approaches, we identified a direct projection from the IC to the contralateral dorsal spinal cord. To determine whether IC activation affect the spinal nociceptive reflex, we measured the spinal nociceptive tail-flick (TF) reflex during IC stimulation. We found that activating the IC by electric stimulation did not significantly alter the spinal TF reflex. Furthermore, in vivo whole-cell patch-clamp…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPain Mechanisms and Treatments · Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies · Pain Management and Treatment
